I think that this is a very hard question to answer. I think that many kings, fictional or not, possess both the bad and good traits of being a king.
In regards to Macbeth, he certainly possessed the ambition many would wish for a king. He was brave, as noted by Duncan and the title of the Thane of Cawdor. He was protective, as noted by his murder of Banquo. Macbeth was even proud, as seen by his desire to keep the new title of Thane before taking the crown.
Unfortunately, many of the characteristics one would align with being a good king made Macbeth a bad king as well. Macbeth was too ambitious--as seen by his murdering Duncan. He was too protective--as seen by his inability to interpret the apparitions warnings in the correct way. Lastly, he was too proud--as seen by his refusal to leave the castle as Birnam Wood "moved" against him.
Like anything, one must always have control. Too much of anything normally turns out to be a bad thing. Therefore, depending upon one's individual views, Macbeth could be both a bad king or a good one.
BTW: It's free real estate.
Bias through photo caption and camera angles because it shows the donut as delicious and irresistible also the caption is hypocritical to the whole reasoning of the poster
A, selecting an appropriate topic
Answer:
How to Write a Summary of Poems
Read it several times. You have to read the poem many times and read it out loud as well. ...
Locate the meter. ...
Examine each stanza. ...
Link each one of your sentences coherently. ...
Analyze the poem and look for any symbolism.
Explanation:
C is the correct answer..